Episode date: May 1, 2008
Transcript published: March 15, 2018

Fr. Thomas examines who the myrrh-bearing women were and clears up some misconceptions about Mary Magdalene in the process.

The third Sunday of Pascha in the Orthodox Church is dedicated to the memory of the myrrh-bearing women, the women who ministered to Jesus during his lifetime, who stood afar off watching the crucifixion—although in St. John’s gospel they are closer—and those who came to the tomb on the first day of the week seeking to anoint the corpse of Jesus, the dead body of Jesus, for his burial.

Episode date: July 17, 2008
Transcript published: March 8, 2018

This time, Fr. Thomas speaks of the Activities and Actions of God.

We have been reflecting about how Christians speak about God: the words that we use, the language that we use. And we have said, and I am convinced, that all speech about God can be classified or categorized in four different ways. There are the names of God, there are the attributes of God, there are the activities or actions of God, and then there are metaphors and similes that are used for God. For God, as God the Father and the Son Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit,…

Episode date: July 14, 2008
Transcript published: March 6, 2018

Fr. Tom continues his discussion, this time focusing on the Divine Attributes of God.

Thinking about how Christians speak about God, we said in our introduction that there are basically four ways, four distinct, to use some technical term, avenues of discourse, ways of speaking, about divinity and about God. We already reflected that the most important, and in some sense the first way for Christians, are the names. And we said that in the holy Scripture the God that Christians believe in and believe in because of Jesus—it all begins with Jesus—being…

Episode date: July 10, 2008
Transcript published: February 23, 2018

Fr. Thomas begins a four-part series on naming God and the language and words we use in the process.

It’s an ancient practice of the Christian Church, in East and West, from the earliest period, that the Church year, the Sundays of the Church year, the Lord’s days, the celebrations of the holy Eucharist on Sunday, the Lord’s day, throughout the year, following Pentecost would be called the Sundays after Pentecost. And the Sundays after Pentecost continue, as I mentioned already earlier, until the beginning of Great Lent. Then when Great Lent begins,…

As we celebrate the Triumph of Orthodoxy and the victory over iconoclasm, Fr. Tom gives a personal reflection on icons and their use and misuse.

Every year at the beginning of Great Lent, we have of course what is called technically the Feast of the Triumph of Orthodoxy. This celebration on the first Sunday of Lent commemorates the return of the holy icons to the Church and to the churches after more than a century of blood in which the icons were either removed from the churches completely or were placed at a height where they could not be venerated but could be only looked at for the sake of some type of…

Episode date: April 11, 2008
Transcript published: January 23, 2018

Fr. Thomas contrasts the story of the fallen, then raised Mary of Alexandria with that of another Mary - the Theotokos.

At the end of the fifth week of Great Lent, and very particularly on the fifth Sunday, the Orthodox Church has all of its members and faithful Christians contemplating a very beloved and well-known person in Christian history for ancient Christians, and that is a woman named Mary of Egypt. On the matins of the Thursday of the fifth week, there is a penitential canon of St. Andrew of Crete that is read. That particular service, which is a long type of penitential vigil,…

Episode date: August 2, 2010
Transcript published: August 22, 2017

On August 6, we will celebrate the Transfiguration of our Lord, and Fr. Thomas Hopko helps us understand the pivotal nature of this event in Christian history.

If we read the synoptic gospels—that means the gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke, called synoptic because they kind of look the same and they have the same material; there’s always the synoptic question, how they are interrelated, and the scholars can debate that, but in any case, we have those three gospels: Mark and Matthew and Luke—I honestly believe, personally, that they pattern the Old Testament genre. I think Mark is a kind of an apocalyptic…

Episode date: June 27, 2009
Transcript published: August 12, 2017

Fr. Thomas discusses "the rock" upon whom Christ built his Church and St. Peter's role in that early Church.

It is a practice of ancient Christianity to celebrate the memories of the Apostles Peter and Paul on the same day and to celebrate them together. It’s also the tradition that when monasteries or churches are dedicated to the memory of these apostles, who are called in Church the “all-laudable and foremost apostles,” the “chief apostles,” that that would be done together as well. You can find it in certain places where in the Orthodox…

Episode date: August 16, 2010
Transcript published: June 5, 2017

In this final installment in his Darwin and Christianity series, Fr. Tom Hopko compares the task and method of natural science with the task and method of Christian theology.

This is number 17 in my reflections on natural science and Christian theology in relationship and being inspired by the so-called Darwinian revolution. In this final reflection, which I’m sure will not be final! There are questions coming in, comments, corrections, additions that, when I reflect through them, I’m sure that I’ll go on Ancient Faith Radio again and pick up some of these, but as far as the formal series is concerned, this will be my…

Episode date: August 9, 2010
Transcript published: May 28, 2017

This is the next-to-last episode in the Darwin series.

As we continue our reflections and our musings, musings about the relationship between Christian theology and natural science, we would like to raise the issue today for your contemplation and your own musings, your own reflection, your own thought, about how faith and knowledge relate to each other and how reason and revelation relate to each other. We could even say how faith relates to reason and how knowledge relates to revelation. Can you really speak about faith…